Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 28

Psychotherapy

MUDr.Lucie Pilaov
Dept. of Psychiatry, Masaryk
University, Brno
Psychotherapy
Includes those means by which a
therapist attemps to provide new
interpersonal experience for another
human being
These experiences are designed to
enhance one ability to manage subjective
disstress

Psychotherapy
It can not alter the problem of world in
which patient lives
But it can enhance self acceptance,
empower the patient to make life changes
and help patient to cope with enviroment
more effectively
Classification of
Psychotherapy
according to who is involved in the
treatment
an individual
a group
a couple
a family therapy
Classification of
Psychotherapy
according to the content and methods
used
analytic
interpersonal
cognitive,behavioral, cognitive -
behavioral
All psychotherapies are aimed at
changing aspects of the patient

Characteristics common for all
psychotherapies
Based on interpersonal relationship
used verbal communication between two
or more people as healing element
specific expertise on the part of the
therapist in using communication and
relationshop in healing way
Characteristics common for all
psychotherapies
based on rationale or conceptual
structure that is used to understand the
patient problem
use of the specific procedure in the
relationship that is linked to rationale
structure relationship
expectation of improvement
Behavior therapy
Aim : change the behavior.
derived from British empiricism, Pavlov
studies of conditioning, research on
stimulus response relationship conducted
by behaviorists (such as Skinner, Wolpe,
Eysenck.)
Behavior therapy
work with objective, observable
phenomena, referred to as behavior,
including physical activities (drinking,
eating, talking, completing a serial
sequential activities that lead to habit
formations and social interaction)
Behavioral techniques
do not necessarily help the patient to
understand his motivations and emotions
(but some od Bs believes that the change
of patients behavior may lead to changes
in how patient think and feels)
symptoms : phobias, obsessions, eating,
sexual disorders, general anxiety, mild
depression, alcohol abuse

The forms of behavioral
therapy
Work on what the patient does

relaxation training
systematic desensitization
flooding
Relaxation training
used to teach patient to control over their
bodies
to achieve voluntary control over their
feeling of tension
to achieve relaxation ( they are instructed
to move through the muscle groups of the
body and make them tense and relaxed)

Systematic desensitization
Teaching how to reduce or control the
fear elicited by specific stimuli
trainig to reduce tense and anxious response
to feared stimuli ,fe therapist may asked the
agoraphobic patient to imagine to visist the
shopping mall where the patient typicaly
develops panic, the patient is ecourage to use
relaxation techniques to diminished panic and
place it under voluntary control
Flooding

aim : to extinguish anxiety produced by
feared stimuli

how : placing the patients in continuous
contact with the stimulus and helping
them learn that stimulus does not lead to
any feared consequences
Cognitive therapy
cognitive structures or schemata shape
the way people react and adapt to a
variety of situations that they encounter
in their lives
Cognitive therapy
aim : to abolish negative thoughts which
allow symptoms to persist
(our moods and feelings are influenced by our
thoughts and the psychological disturbances
are caused by habitual errors in thinking. By
correcting these distorted ways of thinking,
therapist restructure patients views of
themselves)
Cognitive therapy
The three major cognitive patterns
observed in depression (by Beck)
- a negative view of oneself
- a negative interpretation of experience
- a negative view of future
Cognitive therapy
treatment of depression
the schema that lead to negative
interpretations
the goal : to indentify and restructure
those negative schemata (that shape
p.perception)
Individual psychotherapy


Covers broad range of psychotherapeutic
techniques which are usually done
individually - single therapist working
with single patient

Psychoanalysis

Originally developed by S.Freud ( a
systemic theory to describe the structure
and operations of the human psyche)
reorganization of character structure with
emphasis on self understanding and
correction of development lags
Psychoanalysis

basic concept includes stages of
psychosexual development (oral, anal,
phallic)
the structures of conscious and uncoscoius
thougts (primary versus secondary process
thinking)
the structures of drive and motivation (id,
ego, superego)
Psychodynamic psychotherapy
concepts are embodied in psychoanalytic
theory (it does not involve rigidly defined
techniques that charakterized classical
psychoanalysis)
Psychodynamic psychotherapy
based on idea of self exploration and self
understanding open up the possibilities for
change in personality and behaviour
treatment of : personality disorder, sexual
dysfunction, somatoform , anxiety
disorders, mild depression

Types of psychodynamic
psychotherapy
psychoanalysis
exploratory psychotherapy - aims at
understanding motivations and
uncousious forces (focus on current life)
Types of psychodynamic
psychotherapy
supportive psychotherapy - lessening of
anxiety through reassurance, advice,
modifications of social factor (it helps
patients to get through difficult
situations), it is incorporated into any of
the other types os PT
short term psychotherapy
Insight oriented psychotherapy
based on psychodynamic concept
focused on interpersonal relationship -
here and now situation
the patient are encouraged to achieve an
intellectual understanding of the
mainspring of their behavior that will
assist in changing it as needed
Interpersonal therapy

based on idea that mental illness may
reflect and be expressed in problems with
relationship
emphasizes working on improving
interpersonal realtionship during the
process of psychotherapy
References
Waldinger RJ: Psychiatry for medical
student, Washington DC : American
Psychiatric Press, 1997
Collier JAB, Longmore JM, Harvey JH :
Oxford handbook of clinical specialties,
Oxford, 1998

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi